The Model of Resource Efficiency
Our portfolios are systematically constructed based on extensive proprietary research. Through the standardisation of unstructured environmental data, our research process gives context and comparability to corporate environmental disclosures by objectively comparing the environmental balance sheets of companies across 34 industry sectors. Our evidence-based approach, through the stripping out of subjective data, measures sustainable action over intent.
The environmental data and sustainability insights we collect grow more significant by the year. Our resource efficiency database (MoRE) dates back to 2005, and covers over 1000 companies in the developed markets. We believe it is one of the most extensive repositories of environmental data in the world. This gives Osmosis a deep perspective on a company’s relative resource efficiency.
Thought Leadership
Price spikes put renewed focus on construction waste
The resource-intensive sector’s approach to waste management has never been more important.
The environment is not just a carbon issue
While heavy carbon emission is a slow-burn issue, water shortage has a unique immediacy.
Why inflation doesn’t need to cost the earth
Even if upward pressure on prices persists, sustainability can still be a winning theme.
‘Say on Pay’ failures could provide a strong indicator of stock price underperformance
Those companies focusing on delivering undue compensation to executives might also be those which place a low priority on full ESG disclosure.
ESG scores: an outdated concept
It’s time the investment industry changed its attitude towards ESG scores, argues Dr Tom Steffen.
ESG: THE ‘EQUITY VACCINE’ DURING COVID-19 CRASH?
In the aftermath of the COVID-19 crash in March this year, many were quick to point towards the superior performance of ESG Stocks.